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‘Thank you!’ he said, with rather a surprised look. ‘What’s the news in the town today? How do Fitzroy and Billy go on?’

‘I have not heard, but of course we shall call to make enquiries later on. The Duke has driven out in his curricle to rejoin the Army, at Nivelles. We understand he has taken Colonel Felton Hervey on as his military secretary, until Lord Fitzroy is well enough to go back.’

‘A one-armed man!’

‘Yes, and that is what touches one so much. There is a delicacy in such a gesture: Lord Fitzroy must be sensible of it, I am sure! I never thought to like the Duke as well as I have done ever since he called here yesterday.’

The Colonel smiled, but merely replied: ‘He must be worse off than ever for staff officers. I pity the poor devils remaining: they’ll find him damned crusty!’

Judith was quite put out by this prosaic remark, but Colonel Audley knew his Chief better than she did.

The Duke, rejoining his disorganised Army at Nivelles found much to annoy him. He was displeased with the conduct of various sections of his staff, and quite incensed by the discovery that Sir George Wood, who commanded the Royal Artillery, had, instead of securing the captured French guns, allowed a number of them to be seized by the Prussians. That was a little too much; those guns must be recovered, and there would be no peace for Wood or Fraser till they had been recovered.

His lordship, no longer a demi-god but only a much harassed man, sat down to write his instructions for the movement of his Army. There was no difficulty about that: the instructions were compressed into four succinct paragraphs, and borne off by a trembling gentleman of the Quartermaster-General’s staff.

His lordship dipped his pen in the ink and began to compose his first General Order since the battle. The pen moved slowly, in stiff, reluctant phrases.

‘The Field Marshall takes this opportunity of returning to the Army his thanks for their conduct in the glorious action fought on the 18th instant, and he will not fail to report his sense of their conduct in the terms which it deserves to their several Sovereigns.’

His lordship read that through, and decided that it would do. He wrote the figure 3 in the margin, and started another paragraph. His pen began to move faster: ‘The Field Marshal has observed that several soldiers, and even officers, have quitted their ranks without leave, and have gone to Bruxelles, and even some to Antwerp, where, and in the country through which they have passed, they have spread a false alarm, in a manner highly unmilitary, and derogatory to the character of soldiers.’

The pen was flowing perfectly easily now. His lordship continued without a check: ‘The Field Marshal requests the General officers commanding divisions in the British Army . . . to report to him in writing what officers and men (the former by name) are now or have been absent without leave since the 16th instant . . . ’

Short Bibliography

COTTON, Sergt.-Major Edward. A Voice from Waterloo. 10 edn. 1913.

CRAAN, W.B. An Historical Account of the Battle of Waterloo. 1817.

CREEVEY, Thomas. A Selection from the Correspondence and Diaries. Ed., The Rt. Hon. Sir Herbert Maxwell. 1933.

CROKER, John Wilson. Correspondence and Diaries. Ed., Louis J. Jennings. 1884.

DALTON, Charles. The Waterloo Roll Call.

D’ARBLAY, Mme. Diary and Letters. Vol. IV. Ed., Charlotte Barrett.

DE BAS, Col. F., and T’SERCLAES DE WOMMERSON, Col. Ct. J. de. Campagne de 1815 aux Pays-Bas. 4 vols. 1908

DE LANCEY, Lady. A Week at Waterloo in 1815. Ed., Major B. R. Ward. 1906.

ELLESMERE, Earl of. Personal Reminiscences of the Duke of Wellington. Ed., Alice, Countess of Strafford. 1904.

FORTESCUE, The Hon. Sir John. A History of the British Army. Vol

. X. 1920.—Wellington. 1925.

FRASER, Sir William. Words on Wellington. 1900.

GALESLOOT, L. Le Duc de Wellington à Bruxelles. 1884.

GLEIG, Rev. G. R. Story of the Battle of Waterloo. 1847.—Personal Reminiscences of the Duke of Wellington. Ed., Mary E. Gleig. 1904.

GOMM, Sir William Maynard. Letters and Journals.

GREVILLE, Charles. Diary. 2 vols. Ed., Philip Whitwell Wilson. 1927.

GRIFFITHS, Major Arthur. The Wellington Memorial. 1897.—Wellington and Waterloo. 1898.


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